Former NBA player and Jordan Brand endorser Mike Bibby is well-known for having an expansive and exclusive sneaker collection, highlighted by a series of extremely limited Jordan PEs. In the sneakerhead community, Bibby’s PEs—like those made for Ray Allen and a few others—are often considered some of the most valuable and sought-after shoes in existence.

“Mike Bibby’s my brother, he’s been my brother for 15 years,” Fat Joe says. “Nobody’s got more sneakers than Mike Bibby. That’s a fact. Mike Bibby has a house for sneakers. Fuck a room. A full fuckin’ house. A guest house. It’s just disgusting.”

According to Joe, though, when he showed up at Bibby’s house and started plucking shoes out of his collection, things got physical.

“Mike Bibby literally yoked me up,” says Fat Joe. “I think he had a drink or two that day, and he don’t really drink like that.”

Joe continues: “He’s been inviting me to his house for 15 years, and I when I go up in there, you know how we do, I’m coming in there with the duffel bag.”

Once Bibby noticed what Joe was doing—grabbing the best exclusives in his collection, including 1-of-1s like his Jordan IXs and some PEs from his Grizzlies days, he allegedly put Fat Joe in a headlock, before following him to his car and snatching back a bag full of shoes.

Eventually Bibby and Joe cleared the air, and they remain friends to this day, although looking back on the situation, Joe still jokes that “Mike Bibby is like a Indian giver.”

To find players for this year’s game, Roc Nation’s Shawn Pecas traveled to uptown NYC and dropped by the Gauchos Gym in the Bronx and Dyckman Park to recruit on behalf of captains Miguel Cotto and CC Sabathia:

]]>http://www.slamonline.com/news-rumors/other-news/roc-nation-summer-classic-charity-basketball-game/feed/0SLAMonlineFat Joe Regrets Saying That The Notorious B.I.G.’s ‘I Got a Story to Tell’ Was About Anthony Masonhttp://www.slamonline.com/nba/fat-joe-anthony-mason-notorious-big-regret/
http://www.slamonline.com/nba/fat-joe-anthony-mason-notorious-big-regret/#respondWed, 18 May 2016 21:12:55 +0000http://www.slamonline.com/?p=398261

"When I did the interview, it slipped. I didn’t realize nobody else knew. I thought everybody knew,” said Fat Joe.

Earlier this week Fat Joe made headlines when he told ESPN’s Highly Questionable that The Notorious B.I.G.’s “I Got a Story to Tell” was about the late Anthony Mason. Days after the story made the rounds, Joe isn’t back tracking on the statement, but he does feel bad about blowing up Mase’s spot.

“I regret saying that. See, I knew about it…[but] I don’t know if it was my place to say that,” Fat Joe candidly told Hip-Hop Wired. “I ain’t taking nothing back, it is what it is. I’m just saying I don’t know if it was my place to say that.”

Joe, a devoted New York Knicks fans, knew both BIG and Anthony Mason, the latter who passed away at 48 years old in 2015. Which is how he become privy to the info.

“The whole time he played in New York we [were] partying in the clubs together. Me and Charles Oakley, everybody,” explained Joe. “I love Anthony Mason, man, he’s as real as it get. He’s a respectable guy. Rest in peace. I was f*cked up when Ant Mason died.”

He adds, “When I did the interview, it slipped. I didn’t realize nobody else knew. I thought everybody knew.”

Since the release of The Notorious B.I.G.’s “I Got a Story to Tell” in ’97, hip-hop fans have been trying to figure out which Knicks player Biggie robbed for thousands of dollars when a night of infidelity turned into an unplanned heist.

Back in ’14, former Knick John Starks went on ESPN’s Highly Questionable with Dan Le Batard and Bomani Jones and squashed the rumor that Big’s “she get d*ck from a player on the New York Knicks” lyric was about him. Since then, Le Batard and Jones have been on the case to figure out who the player was.

On yesterday’s show, the hosts were joined by rapper and Knicks fan Fat Joe who spilled the beans on who was on the wrong side of Biggie’s pistol.

“I could tell you but I don’t want to be disrespectful,” said Joe. “It was about Anthony Mason. Rest In Peace.”

Mason passed away in February ’15 at the age of 48. The one-time all-star appeared in Diamond D’s “Best Kept Secret” video in ’92.

Back in the summer of 2003, Jay Z and Fat Joe each assembled star-studded streetball squads that were supposed to play one another in the EBC Championship at the legendary Rucker Park. Unfortunately, a blackout screwed everything up—and since then, the story has become streetball lore, a tale of the biggest game that never was. Above you can stream The Blackout, the full, definitive documentary on the non-game—which includes appearances from both rappers and a host of NBA players—or go download a copy for yourself at theblackout.tv.

On many levels, premiering the documentary, The Blackout, in the midst of All-Star weekend in Los Angeles, was so appropriate.

About two miles from the orange-carpet event SLAM helped sponsor—with MTV2 and Sucker Free’s DJ Envy serving as host—at the Downtown Independent theater last Saturday, the NBA was hosting its annual showcase inside Staples Center and the L.A. Convention Center. Each year, for the past 60, the league seemingly promotes it as one of the best ever—or at least one of the best in recent memory. Yet, by the time the festivities draw to a close, you often think that wasn’t the case. With the Entertainers Basketball Classic at Rucker Park in 2003, there’s little argument about where that summer stands in New York’s illustrious streetball history.

The documentary, by directors Edgar Burgos (below left) and Thanasis Petrakis, focuses on the most alluring summer for the famed Harlem playground. Rappers Fat Joe and Jay-Z assembled their respective teams with NBA All-Stars and street ball legends. And on their way to the championship game, drawing celebrities from the sports and music world (along with former president Bill Clinton and NBA commissioner David Stern), a sudden halt disrupts everything.

New York was hit with the largest blackout in U.S. history. The game was rescheduled. Jay-Z was unable to make it. Some of his players were no-shows, too. And the game many had hoped to see never materialized.

Yet the film is not dampened by the blackout.

At its essence, the documentary features the NBA’s star players competing at the grassroots level: at the playground, in front of local residents. Except in this instance, professional basketball players and up-and-comers take center court. Small crowds turn into thousands. And often times the experience seemingly outweighs the atmosphere of an NBA game.

“It’s a different feeling with 2,000 (fans) than it is with 20,000 people,” Jermaine O’Neal, who has played in the NBA for 14 years, said in the film, “because with 2,000 people, those are loyal basketball heads. That’s probably the most nervous I’ve been in a basketball game, ever in my life.”

“I remember the first time I played out there,” Allen Iverson said in the movie. “I couldn’t believe how many people came out to see the game. It wasn’t an out of bounds lines; it was people’s feet. So if you made a shot or stumbled on the sidelines, you fell on top of people. It might be harder to play out there than it is to play in the Garden.”

Among the more stunning images in the film—celebrities aside—are the crowds. Thousands lined up hours before games began that season.

“It’s crazy, man,” said Stephen Jackson, now with Charlotte Bobcats. “You got guys hanging on the fence. It’s just like the outside version of Madison Square Garden. It’s big. If you haven’t played there, you’re not a real hooper.”

“It was the most craziest atmosphere I’ve ever been in, in my life,” said Fat Joe, who led the EBC champion Terror Squad teams in 2002 and 2003.

The rosters were filled with NBA players. Fat Joe’s Terror Squad had Carmelo Anthony, Amar’e Stoudemire, Zach Randolph, Stephon Marbury, Rafer Alston and Al Harrington. And Jay-Z’s S.Dot Carter team cobbled together a team that featured Lamar Odom, Sebastian Telfair, Jamal Crawford, and Eddy Curry, with LeBron James, Tracy McGrady and Shaquille O’Neal set to play the originally scheduled title game.

“You’re not really an NBA player, I guess, until you experience the Rucker at least one time,” said Shawn Marion.

The difference there, Crawford said, is that there’s “some people that’s in the NBA [that] I don’t think can survive out there” at Rucker Park.

Blame it on the crowds—with no allegiance to a particular team—that erupt after, say, Lamar Odom throws the ball between a defender’s legs on his way to the basket, and the emcee that bellows in excitement the way a fan would, embarrassing the defender.

Mentioned late in the film, but perhaps overlooked, is that professional basketball players competed at Rucker Park for free. Paid millions to perform in NBA arenas, they played that summer in the playground, where the average fan could touch them.

“This is street basketball,” said Fat Joe. “We do this on the pavement, concrete. This is what’s so beautiful about coming out here and being in the hood. Most of these kids here don’t even get to witness an NBA game, unfortunately. The whole thing about it is: seeing Jay-Z, seeing Fat Joe, seeing Stephon Marbury, seeing Shawn Marion, seeing LeBron James. They could finally touch their heroes and see them in the park.”

And while sports is littered with debates about where certain moments rank, there is little argument about where the summer of 2003 in the EBC stands among the most memorable seasons ever at the playground simply known as “The Rucker.”

For more on the screening, check out MTV2’s “Sucker Free Countdown” this Sunday at 11 a.m. EST, and check out theblackout.tv anytime.